Wednesday, November 14th 2007
Thermaltake Has The World’s First and Only 1500W NVIDIA SLI Certified Power Supply
Thermaltake lifted up today its top of the line Toughpower power supply units to 1500W. Claiming that Toughpower 1500W has the highest output wattage among all SLI certified PSUs in the market, and is the only 1500W PSU in the world that's certified for SLI, you'll receive very well made modular unit that has four independent +12V rails, is Intel ATX 12V 2.3 and EPS 2.91 compatible and has four 6pin PCI-E and four 8pin PCI-E connectors for multiple high-end video cards. The unit is cooled by a quiet and reliable 14cm ball-bearing fan. It also has Active Power Factor Correction, high efficiency of up to 87% and Over Current, Over Voltage, Under Voltage, Over Temperature, Over Power, and Short-Circuit protection.
Source:
Thermaltake
34 Comments on Thermaltake Has The World’s First and Only 1500W NVIDIA SLI Certified Power Supply
If you run this thing at peak power you better not have anything else plugged into that circuit, or you will be flipping breakers quite often. ;)
300w draw is still pretty decent, but I'd get a lower wattage PS. The cost of a 550-750w 80Plus unit vs this 1500w unit could be $200! The extra efficient of a 300w draw on a 600w PS will give ya a couple bucks every months on you power bill.
This is not a bad PS if you want a C2Q and (4) 8800GTX :D
My system for example draws 300w load from the wall (thank you killawatt). Figure my gamexstream 700w gets 80% thats 300 x .80 = 240w used.
Newteckie you may have something wrong with your wiring. Most vaccumes are 2-3 amp, your pc pulls 3-4 amp at full load, stereo prolly 2 amp, and tv almost nothing. If I were you I would find out what all is on your circuit. You may have multiple rooms and possibly appliances on your breaker therefore creating an overload.
also, this psu has dual transformers doesn't it?
120A.. wow.
www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm
Quad-SLI + QuadCore... lets sum it up shortly:
4xGTX = 4x 150W
Quadcore = 130W
all the other stuff = 100W
830W... so... you could run roughly two of those systems with that useless piece of non-sense.
Edit:
No 14 wire is used on a 20A IIRC, my Dad will know, he is a master electrican.
You could have upgraded to a 10KW power supply from your old 300 watt, and if anything it will lower your electric bill due to the power supply being less stressed (more efficent under less stress).